Feast of the Fallen (Villains of Kassel #3) Read Online Lydia Michaels

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Dark, Virgin Tags Authors: Series: Villains of Kassel Series by Lydia Michaels
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Total pages in book: 164
Estimated words: 156728 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 784(@200wpm)___ 627(@250wpm)___ 522(@300wpm)
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Helpless.

“Fuck!”

She didn’t even have a phone. And for all its luxurious amenities, neither did the suite. “God damnit!” Her hands balled into fists.

“What do I do?” She turned like a fool searching for solutions that didn’t exist.

She went to the window, flinging back the drapes. Her hands pressed on the glass, but it wouldn’t budge. Night had fallen, and her troubled reflection stared back at her in a mirror of black.

“Shit.”

Shadows moved in the distance, a shimmer, like a ripple. Stars pierced the sky like pinholes in a sheet of endless blue. Daisy framed her eyes to block out the interior light, and they adjusted to the darkness.

Was that water?

The moon’s filtered glow reflected below, undulating as if rolling over smooth waves.

Was she on an island? Or a peninsula of sorts? The clue to her location should have grounded her, but it was really just a larger cage.

She was locked in a room on a possible island in the middle of God-knew-where.

Number 1922.

Backing away from the windows, her stomach cramped with a mixture of hunger and dread. Any consideration to eat their food vanished.

She was a rat in a cage, in whatever experiment this was. Sometimes, people wore white coats and did unethical things. To humans. To rats.

Snatching the tempting chocolate from the pillow, she threw it against the wall. “Fuck!”

She fell back and stilled, groaning in absolute frustration. “God damnit,” she snapped. “It is soft.” She punched whatever thread count this was and growled.

She had no other option but to do as she’d been told—sleep and pray to God someone would let her out in the morning.

The Becoming started at ten. That was less than twelve hours away. She needed to sleep to keep her wits about her and stay sharp for whatever came next.

Forcing her frustration aside, she climbed under the covers and tried to fall asleep. But any sense of decadence was permanently overshadowed by feelings of distrust.

She shut her eyes.

Hours passed. Or maybe minutes. Time moved strangely in this place, elastic and uncertain.

She twisted and turned, not used to such comfort. After a while, she tried lying on the floor, hoping the stiffness might remind her of home.

It didn’t.

Her senses were on overload.

She moved back to the bed. Stared at the ceiling. Her body was exhausted, but her mind refused to quiet.

The clock on the bedside table continued to move. 3:47 AM. In a few hours, breakfast would be served. Then, The Becoming. Then The Feast of the Fallen would begin.

She needed to sleep.

By four-thirty, she was convinced she was going to die before Monday. Completely freaked out and wired despite her exhaustion, she gave up. Her survival required rest.

Climbing out of bed, she went to the counter and downed the cup of cold tea. “Oh, God,” she gagged, setting the porcelain aside with a shaky hand. The bitter, medicinal taste stayed with her for several minutes, then started to fade as she lay in bed, waiting for it to take effect.

Minutes passed. Or maybe seconds. Time softened at the edges as her surroundings blurred, and blinking became harder and harder. Her limbs grew heavy. Her thoughts, which had been racing for hours, drifted into faint whispers.

Trust no one, she thought, the words fuzzy and distant.

Survive.

Don’t...get…caught⁠—

Chapter Eleven

The Golden Goose

Blood on his sleeve. Blood on his hands. Blood pounding in his ears.

Jack tore through the Chancellor’s study, ripping drawers from their tracks, scattering papers across the Persian carpet. His fingers trembled so violently he could barely grip the files as he shoved them into the sack.

Move. Move. Move.

Bloody fingerprints smeared across pristine notes.

He wasn’t dead. Any second, someone could find him. Jack could still feel his crushing weight collapsing on top of him, still hear that wet gurgle of breath, the sickening crack of weighted gold smashing against his skull.

Jack left him upstairs, lying in a pool of blood.

He’s not dead. What if he dies?

It didn’t matter. Nothing mattered, except getting out.

Yanking open another drawer, he ransacked the contents. Financial records. Account numbers. A paper trail of corruption. Jack shoved anything of possible value into the pillowcase.

Take it all. Take everything.

In the hall, the grandfather clock chimed quarter to the hour. Fifteen minutes until supper. Fifteen minutes until someone went searching for the chancellor.

Hurry.

He rushed to the wall where a painting of Genghis Khan hung on hidden hinges, swinging it open to expose the squat, black safe. Jack had watched the chancellor open it a hundred times, stuffing it full of crisp bills that would only resurface as hush money.

Jack needed that money. Without it, he wouldn’t last a week.

His fingers hovered over the keypad. Four digits. But the selection was always hidden, blocked by his fat body.

Think. What would he choose?

His birthday.

Jack typed the numbers in with shaky hands and the safe gave a shrill beep followed with a punishing red flash.


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